"THE CASE OF THE MISSING AMERICAN"
Lost
Adventures: from Wango to Solovetski Island
with John William Adkins
AN AMERICAN’S FATE IN STALIN’S SOVIET UNION
An unusual subject was investigated by Blitz Information
Services - BLITZ over a four year period beginning in 1996. A client approached
us with a request to look for information about his relative who was an
American. This grand-uncle, John William Adkins, was a miner in Alaska and disappeared into the Soviet Union when he was trying
to travel to Argentina to find work. It was his misfortune to book passage
to Argentina on a Soviet freighter. The last letter his family received
from him was from Ketchikan, Alaska dated Dec. 1924.
The sad story of the misadventures of this person
in Soviet Russia was revealed by BLITZ using many Archives and an in-depth
step by step process. As became known through this research, Adkins did
not have any travel documents and was arrested in Petropavlovsk for illegally
arriving in the country. He then
received a temporary residence permit in Khabarovsk and began to travel across the country looking for a job. He sought work in
cities such as, Irkutsk, Moscow, and then Tula. He tried unsuccessfully
to receive the necessary residential documents to stay in the Soviet Union.
Consequently he was arrested in Tula on the charge of “expiration of
Residence Permit”.
It is impossible to imagine how this person could
reside in the Soviet Union without any documents and without the knowledge
of the Russian language. It seems that the Soviet authorities could not
decide what to do with him. On November 5, 1927, they deported him to
Estonia in a rather un-official way. They took him to the border
and ordered him to go to the other side. He was then arrested by the Estonian
border guards for illegal border crossing and jailed in the Tallinn prison. This could have been the solution to his problems
because Estonia (in contrast to Soviet Russia) did have diplomatic
relations with the USA at that time. The American consul came to the prison
and offered him an American passport to return to the USA. However, he refused this offer, declaring that he wished to be an
Argentina subject and hoped to make his way there.
He was exiled back into Russia and then deported to Finland where the Finnish government put him in prison. He
was soon returned to the Soviet Union where he was exiled to the city
of Vologda. From there he went to Leningrad and tried again to go to Finland in order to find a ship going to Argentina. He was arrested at the Finnish border and was returned
to Leningrad where he was imprisoned. On September 24, 1929 he was sentenced to the Solovetskii labor-corrective camp (gulag) in the far
north as a "socially dangerous element".
This was the last mention of him in documents found
by BLITZ using many Russian and Estonian Archives. Information about his
ultimate fate has not yet been found in the archival documents of this
camp nor at the FSB (former KGB). He could have died or been killed during
deportation to the gulag or disappeared by some unknown reason.
After BLITZ succeeded in finding materials which
documented these events, our client who ordered this work came to Russia several times. He visited the cities in which his relative
had resided as well as Solovetskii island and offices of the FSB Archives,
where documents concerning his grand-uncle are held. Our client wrote
a book about his grand-uncle’s tribulations in the Soviet Union. Copies of the book and short leaflets about this
story were circulated in various cities and institutions in Russia in hope that somebody may know about the ultimate fate
of his relative. With this same goal, BLITZ arranged a radio program on
this subject at Radio 'Svoboda' [Liberty]. None of these efforts have
yet provided an answer to this last question.
This successful search is an example of how Blitz
used some very limited initial information, i.e. the persons name, a
1928 newspaper story from Salisbury, Maryland, and the American file from
the National Archives in Washington, D.C. (from the American Consulate
in Estonia in 1927), to track down relevant documents in Russia. Much
of this research required accessing the archives of the FSB (former KGB),
and even the Estonian archive. Blitz found this to be a rather difficult
assignment but not impossible.
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If you are
interested in purchasing the published book Lost Adventures- -from Wango
to Solovetski Island with John William Adkins, please contact the
following web site, www.adkinslostadvent.com.
There is a
three page description at this web site, and instructions of
purchasing this book from Authorhouse. The book is also listed on many of
the major book distributors web sites.
For information searches, contact BLITZ – Information
Services at enute@igc.org
or blitz@peterlink.ru. |